- Arrignon Daniel
- Cismondi Nora
- Cock Nicolas
- Cooper Peter
- Craig Celia
- Crocquenoy Michel
- Daniel Nicholas
- Deutsch Nick
- Di Cioccio Paolo
- Doherty Diana
- Doise Olivier
- Fillon Jean-Luc
- Furube Kenichi
- Garrote Nestor
- Gattet Alexandre
- Gironi Marco
- Grenat Bertrand
- Grindel Christophe
- Guichard Jérôme
- Ikeda Shoko
- Kakizaki Kozo
- Kelly Jonathan
- Kobayashi Yu
- Leleux François
- Lencses Lajos
- Merville François
- Mogami Takayuki
- Moinet Céline
- Negroni Alberto
- Oboe Five
- Octuor Paris-Bastille
- Ogrintchouk Alexei
- Orlando Domenico
- Pellerin Louise
- Pollastri Paolo
- Ramón Ortega
- Romano Carlo
- Salvatori Marco
- Saumon Pascal
- Schilli Stefan
- Sugiura Naoki
- Terashima Yosuke
- Tondre Philippe
- Tsuji Isao
- Varcol Liviu
- Vogel Allan
- Walter David
- Yoon Minkyu
- Yoshii Mizuho
- Young Kim Hag
Salvatori Marco
Marigaux Oboe
MARCO SALVATORI studied the oboe with Augusto Loppi at the Santa Cecilia Conservatorio, Rome and received his diploma in 1989. He continued his studies at the Accademia Chigiana, Siena,with Hansjörg
Schellenberger and in Master Classes with Maurice Borgue and Thomas Indermuhle at the Saluzzo “Scuola di Alto Perfezionamento Musicale”. He has held the post of Principal Oboe in the Orchestra dell’Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia, the Scala Philharmonic, the RAI Orchestra Sinfonica Nazionale, the Israel Philharmonic and the Maggio Musicale Orchestra, Florence, under the baton of, among others, Riccardo Muti, Zubin Mehta, Seiji Ozawa, Valerij Gergiev, Riccardo Chailly and Gustavo Dudamel.
He has performed as a soloist in major concert halls in Italy and in Europe, for example, the Musikverein in Vienna and the Frankfurt Alte Oper with Zubin Mehta conducting. He won first prize in 1990 at the
Turin “Premio Settembre Musica” and in 1995 in the Petritoli ”Giuseppe Tomassini Competition”. In 1999 he won the place of Principal Oboe in the orchestra of the Genoa Carlo Felice Theatre and a few
months later the same position in the Maggio Musicale Orchestra, Florence.
